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Many employees perform emotional labor, regulating their emotions to meet organizationally mandated display rules (e.g., “service with a smile”), which has both professional and personal implications. Emotion regulation in a work context is important to enhance customers’ mood and service satisfaction, but putting on that smile to perform one’s work role can have surprising costs depending on how the emotions are regulated. When employees try to change their feelings to appear sincere (i.e., deep acting), performance is enhanced, yet employees must often “fake it” (i.e., surface act), which has consequences to their well-being. We discuss how these concepts are similar and distinct from emotion-regulation strategies while also reviewing work factors that help optimize emotional labor’s impact on performance and well-being. Finally, we note recent studies that have expanded the concept of emotional labor and the methods used to capture this workplace experience.
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Grandey et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69db1d43498b35d3e6a3c65c — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/0963721418812771
Alicia A. Grandey
Pennsylvania State University
Gordon M. Sayre
Université de Bourgogne
Current Directions in Psychological Science
Pennsylvania State University
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